Lorcan Cranitch

Lorcan Cranitch
Born (1959-08-28) 28 August 1959
Dublin, Ireland
Nationality Irish
Occupation Actor
Years active 1991present

Lorcan Cranitch (born 28 August 1959) is an Irish actor.

Born in Dublin, Lorcan Cranitch became involved in drama while a student, and in 1980, he moved to London where he trained at RADA.[1] His first major role on British television was as Tim Healy in the 1991 BBC drama series, Parnell and the Englishwoman.[2] It was as the troubled DS Jimmy Beck in Cracker (1993-1995) that he became a familiar face to viewers. When he informed the producers of his intention to leave the show following the second season, his character was killed off in a spectacular suicide scene in October 1995.

Following Cracker, he returned to the BBC in a part specially written for him, as Sean Dillon in Ballykissangel.[3] In 2001, he starred in the short-lived drama series McCready and Daughter, taking on a role originally intended for his former Ballykissangel co-star, Tony Doyle, who died shortly before the series was due to be filmed. He appeared in several other British television dramas, including Deacon Brodie (with Billy Connolly), Shackleton (as Frank Wild) with Kenneth Branagh, Omagh, Hornblower (with Ioan Gruffudd), The Street, Waking the Dead, Spooks, Silent Witness and New Tricks. In 2005, he took a villainous role in the HBO/BBC production of Rome, as the underworld baron Erastes Fulmen. In the 2009 BBC drama Best: His Mother's Son, he played Dickie Best, the father of footballer George Best.

Lorcan briefly appeared as DI Littlejohn in the Sky Atlantic Series, Fortitude.

On film he has appeared in Dancing at Lughnasa with Meryl Streep, The Playboys and Titanic Town. In 2016 he appeared in season 5 episode 7 of the BBC series Death in Paradise.

He has combined this with stage work with The Royal National Theatre, The Royal Shakespeare Company, Donmar West End, and The Abbey and The Gate theatres in Dublin.[4] He is married to Susan Jackson, a journalist and newsreader with RTÉ.[5] The couple adopted an Ethiopian child in 2011.[6]

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, April 23, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.